Bangladesh’s
recovery from economic fallout of the first wave of pandemic has been more
inclusive than even some of the high-income countries of the world, suggests a
just-published survey result.
In between June
2020 and January 2021, proportion of pandemic-induced unemployment witnessed a
70% decline.
In June 2020—the
month after the government-announced lockdown in Bangladesh ended—17.2% of main
household earners of a sample population in rural Bangladesh reported being
unemployed, but that percentage dropped to only 5.1 in January 2021.
People living in
moderate to severe food insecurity also marked great improvement from 45% in
June last year to only 16% in January this year.
The
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) and Cornell University
used pre-pandemic data and conducted two rounds of phone surveys on the same
sample of over 2,000 rural households in June 2020 and in January 2021 to track
the experiences and impacts of the Covid-19 crisis over time in Bangladesh.
And last week,
IFPRI and Cornell came up with the findings suggesting that unlike experiences
in some high-income countries, recovery has been relatively inclusive in rural
Bangladesh.
IFPRI and Cornel
University researchers quoted a recent Pew Research Center findings that
lower-income adults in the United States continue to be left behind, with
consistently higher rates of unemployment and income losses compared with
“better off” adults months after the initial onset.
Similarly, they
said, the European Union economy remains stifled amid recurring waves of the
pandemic, with the EU economy commissioner predicting that the economy will not
recuperate until as late as 2023.
“Encouragingly,
ten months after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, (in January in Bangladesh)
unemployment fell, income losses were diminished, and there were reductions in
the prevalence of moderate and severe food insecurity,” a joint IFPRI, Cornell
policy note stated drawing from the findings of their repeat surveys.
However, policy
note stated that the prevalence of “mild food insecurity” had been
significantly higher than the pre-pandemic period, suggesting a fragility in
the economic recovery of rural Bangladesh.
“These findings are not intended to diminish
the economic fallout of the pandemic in Bangladesh, as well as the human costs
of losing 9,046 lives due to Covid-19 in the country as of April 3, 2021—the
most recent data available at the time that this note was published,” reads the
policy note titled – “Signs of Recovery: Patterns of Food Insecurity Before and
During Covid-19 in Rural Bangladesh.”
Although
coronavirus continues to spread and poses a real threat to development gains,
Bangladesh has emerged as one of the leading countries in terms of its Covid-19
vaccination distribution, it says.
“Bangladesh
started a nationwide vaccination campaign in early February 2021, starting with
adults over age 40. Although these developments have slowed the spread of the
virus and paved the way for many dimensions of recovery, the resurgence of the
pandemic starting in mid-March 2021 is a sobering reminder that the dynamics of
the coronavirus pandemic tend to be quite erratic.”
IFPRI-Cornell
survey found out that over 12% of the rural sample received Covid-related cash
support at least once since the beginning of the pandemic, and over one-third
(35.2 percent) of surveyed households received cash-based assistance. However,
they note, such government-provided assistances gradually declined in recent
months.
The policy noted
recalled that amid the coronavirus pandemic, Cyclone Amphan hit Bangladesh on
May 20, 2020, which affected 26 districts in southern and southwestern
Bangladesh.
In response to
the double crisis, policy note stated, the government increased its allocation
for the gratuitous relief program nearly six-times to Tk30.62 billion in
FY2020/2021 from the FY2019/2020 budget. There were other safety net programs
implemented to mitigate the effects of the Covid-19 crisis, which includes,
among others, one-off cash support to five million poor and vulnerable families
through mobile financial services and different stimulus packages.
“Despite an
alarming rise in food insecurity in the immediate months after the onset of the
pandemic, Bangladesh has shown encouraging signs of recovery in food security
nearly a year later. Nevertheless, food security has not returned to
pre-pandemic levels, reinforcing the importance of continuing to rapidly and
rigorously collect data to guide evidence-based decision-making for an
inclusive recovery process moving forward,” the research observed.
As their
research outcome comes at a time when a second wave of pandemic was forcing
Bangladesh to go for another bout of hard lockdown, The media wanted to know
probable coping mechanism from Dr Akhter Ahmed, a lead researcher of the
IFPRI-Cornell initiative.
He spoke of a
few options for revamping the social safety net system that the government can
consider to protect the livelihoods of the poor and vulnerable and to build
resilience during the Covid-19 outbreak and beyond.
“In the
immediate-term, the government can redesign conditional safety nets requiring
work, like the Employment Generation Program for the Poorest (EGPP) and the
food-for-work program, to make them unconditional cash or food transfer
programs until the situation improves,” recommended Dr Akhter, who is also the
country representative of IFPRI in Bangladesh.
He said, this
will ensure that the poor who were receiving this kind of assistance beforehand
are not cut off during this critical period.
“No extra cash,
food, or listing of beneficiaries are needed to do this.”
Noting that
household targeting in quick humanitarian relief is difficult, Dr Akhter
suggested the government could rather, consider distributing relief to the
whole community where the poor live, such as urban slums, thereby avoiding the
cost and complexity of household-level targeting.
He further
noted: “In Bangladesh, safety net programs mainly cover rural areas, there is a
lack of programs for the urban poor. Although the Covid-19 outbreak has
impacted everyone, lower income people living in urban areas are the hardest
hit, whose livelihoods are seriously compromised and need immediate
assistance.”
“Programs such
as ‘cash for work’ or ‘food for work’ for urban environmental clean-up,
maintenance of road-side trees and gardens, maintenance of primary schools
programs, among others, are promising for both men and women. Physical work
requirements in such programs greatly improve targeting performance because
only the poor tend participate.”
In the longer
term, an important area of expansion of social protection in Bangladesh is
social health insurance, opined the IFPRI country head.
“Health-related shocks can have catastrophic consequences for low-income people and cause households to fall into poverty traps. Therefore, a well-designed social health insurance program for both urban and rural poor should be considered as an essential element of the social protection system in Bangladesh. This initiative should be piloted and evaluated before scaling up,” he added.
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